Litcius/Paper detail

Impacts of water temperature on the physiology and behaviours of the sea urchins <i>Heliocidaris crassispina</i> and <i>Mesocentrotus nudus</i> that reflect their range extension and disappearance in the Oga Peninsula, northern Honshu, Japan

Wenping Feng, Nobuyasu Nakabayashi, Eri Inomata, Masakazu Aoki, Yukio Agatsuma

2020Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Ocean warming has facilitated the extension of Heliocidaris crassispina to Oga Peninsula, Japan, where the native species Mesocentrotus nudus has disappeared. To verify the temperature impacts on the physiology and behaviour of the two species, we reared small sea urchins at the increasing–decreasing temperature rate of 2.5 °C·week −1 . The righting response, lantern reflex, gonad and gut carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) contents, and feeding rate were investigated. The high and low temperature limits of H. crassispina were 33.3 and 3.9 °C, respectively, which were higher than those of M. nudus. The optimal temperature ranges for behaviour and feeding in H. crassispina were 10.3–31.0 and 10.3–33.4 °C, respectively, which were higher than those in M. nudus. Feeding rates decreased significantly in both species when the temperature approached the high or low temperature limit, but the gut C and N contents of were not greatly affected. At 26–31 °C, the feeding rate significantly decreased in M. nudus but not in H. crassispina, which may explain the replacement of M. nudus by H. crassispina in the Oga Peninsula.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEcologyZoologyEffects of global warming on oceansGlobal warmingClimate changeMarine and coastal plant biologyOcean Acidification Effects and ResponsesCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies